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Social Sciences of the Scientific Method

The empirical study of how the scientific method is actually practiced—not as an ideal, but as a messy human activity. Social Sciences of the Scientific Method examines how methods vary across disciplines, how they're learned, how they're enforced, how they change. It reveals that "the scientific method" is a textbook ideal; real science uses multiple methods, adapted to context, shaped by community norms. Understanding this helps bridge the gap between philosophy of method and actual practice.
"Your textbook says there's one scientific method. Social sciences of the scientific method says: go look in actual labs—you'll find many methods, adapted, improvised, negotiated. The ideal is neat; the reality is messy. Social science shows you the mess."
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Social Sciences of the Scientific Method

The application of social science disciplines—sociology, anthropology, political science, economics—to the study of the scientific method. The social sciences of the scientific method examine how social forces shape methodological practice: how power and status influence which methods are valued; how economic incentives shape methodological choices; how political contexts constrain or enable certain kinds of inquiry; how cultural assumptions are embedded in methodological standards; how institutions create and maintain methodological orthodoxies. They treat the scientific method not as a purely logical procedure but as a social practice—shaped by all the forces that shape any human activity. The social sciences of the scientific method reveal that method is never just about logic; it's always also about power, money, culture, and social structure.
Social Sciences of the Scientific Method Example: "His social sciences of the scientific method research showed how the dominance of quantitative methods in economics reflects not their inherent superiority but the political and economic interests that funded certain kinds of research over others. The method that won wasn't necessarily the best—it was the best supported."

Social Sciences of the Scientific Method

A field that examines how the scientific method is institutionally enforced, how methodological standards vary across disciplines, and how the method is invoked in public debates. It uses sociological tools to study peer review, funding decisions, and the publication system as mechanisms that shape what counts as legitimate method. It also explores how methodological controversies (e.g., the replication crisis) reflect broader social tensions within scientific communities.
Example: “Social sciences of the scientific method revealed that the replication crisis was not a failure of individual scientists but a consequence of institutional incentives that prioritized novel, positive results over rigorous methodology.”

bang a you-ee 

of Massachusetts orig. "to make a u-turn"
hey, we missed the bar, bang a you-ee
Word of the Day on July 19, 2026
The word 'flag' as pronounced by people with thick Belfast accents. The term is a perfect encapsulation of the disproportionate and overblown reaction to the removal of the Union Jack (as in 'de fleg') from above City Hall in Belfast. Where previously it had flown for 365 days per year, it is now flown on 17 designated days of the year - in line with many other British cities.

The event caused a portion of the Protestant community ('fleggers') to make international pricks of themselves as they proceeded to wreck the fucking place, claiming it was another erosion of a 'British' identity they perceive to have been under attack since the horrifying spectre of equality reared its head in Northern Ireland.

The word 'fleg' - and indeed 'fleggers' - fittingly describes a section of humanity unconcerned with knowledge, reality or the vagaries of the English language. Like America's tea-baggers they are ruled by instinct, fear and paranoia with a side dish of rampant bigotry and startling ignorance of the world around them.
"Wat de fuck like! The taigs got de fleg took down! Let's wreck de fuckin place! No surrender!"

"De fleg has been took down! Before ye know it there'll be a united Ireland! Attack Short Strand! God Save The Queen!"
Fleg by OnionFleg August 9, 2013
Word of the Day on July 18, 2026
To take something small, that doesn't quite qualify as a theft. Probably from the Danish "skæv" or the Dutch "scheef", both of which are pronounced similarly, meaning "askew, or not quite right'. To change an item's ownership without permission, but only something small and of little worth.
"I skeefed an apple off the neighbor's tree." "I skeefed some chips outta your bag when you looked away." "Don't skeef my chair when I go to the bathroom."
Skeef by kachinaflonk July 16, 2026
Word of the Day on July 17, 2026

Hair spider

A tight, tangled knot of loose hair and lint that forms inside clothing during the clothes dryer cycle. It typically hides inside garments, causing an annoying lump or a phantom tickling sensation against the skin until it is found or falls out onto the floor during folding.
I was folding my clothes and a huge hair spider fell out onto my hand
Hair spider by Kmorsels July 15, 2026
Word of the Day on July 16, 2026